EVENTS

Why I Hate The Olympics

I hate the olympics because of the corruption in the surrounding fol-de-rol, the pointless displays of silly excess, and the nationalism.

Especially the nationalism.

I cringe when I see “USA WINS (whatever)” No, actually, it was Simone Biles that won. It was Michael Phelps that won. They would have won if they had been doing floor routines for Finland, or swimming for Sweden.

I loathe the tasteless costumes, which are frequently parodies of national

Ralph Lauren US Olympic Preppy Costume

clothes. For one thing, the idea of “national clothes” carries the acrid reek of fascism to my nose. For another, it overrides what ought to be interesting about the event!! Why not have the fencers come out wearing gloriously fencing-inspired costumes? But, you know what? Most of the athletes, you know, athlete, in costume already.

Meanwhile, Ralph Lauren, is the French Beret now a “Freedom Beret”? And look at the horrible fit of that jacket! It’s a national embarrassment if that‘s a national blazer. And … rounded collar with peaked lapels? Raaaaaaaalph, what were you smoking?

If the athletes must be costumed, why not let the athletes costume

Now I remember where I saw that picture

themselves, and have a red carpet show just like at the other great cheese-events like the Oscars? Give them a chance to reflect on themselves and what they feel about themselves. If they’ve got national pride they want to show, let them. And if they want to wear a shirt that says “Black Lives Matter” let them.

Simone Biles’ Amazing Olympic Costume

The nationalists have turned the Olympics into a great big festival of power and control – a demonstration of how it’s all about them and their petty agendas – not about the athletes. The athletes, by the way, are the only reason anyone should be watching that crap. Simone Biles does not need to be wearing an american flag. Simone Biles is the nation of Simone Biles and her costume is her gymnastics. Seriously, how can even the incredible (picture me rolling my eyes so hard I sprain my neck) Ralph Lauren imagine he can gild that lily? The beautiful part about that picture is her smile – not her outfit – it is not possibleto improve on that smile with an outfit made from cloth.

Can you imagine what it feels like to know that you’re probably one of the best ever at that thing you do? And undoubtedly the best in the world right now? Poor Ralph Lauren will never get to know.

But oligarchs have gotta oligarch, and another important oligarch dance is the “look at my opulence dance” – the Olympics are a great opportunity to spend billions of dollars on fancy stadia that now look like this:

Athens Olympic Stadium: $10billion (source: daily mail)

I am Olympics, king of kings, look upon my works, ye mortals, and despair!

Sarajevo – 1984

Need I mention that the citizens of Greece probably wish they had that $10billion right about now?

Here’s my suggestions:

Make the olympics about the athletes and hold the events around the world, at the place(s) that make the most sense. Hold the skiing at the slope that makes the most sense, when it makes the most sense.

Forget the pageantry and make it about the athletes.

Get the nationalism out of the sports, athletes should be referred to by name and not nation – this would do a lot to reduce the need nationalists feel to win at all costs, by cheating.

Do not allow news-casters that are talking heads: have a fencer comment on the fencing and a gymnast on the gymnastics, etc. Let the media talking heads talk about being media talking heads – somewhere else.

At the end of the year, have a great big oscars-style ceremony and let the athletes wear whatever they damn well want on the red carpet.

Have an additional layer of medals given out at the oscars-style ceremony for “Best supporting player” “Best coach” “Sportsmanship” “Best photo” “Best video segment”

At the oscars-style ceremony, you do not have Hollywood vapids or media talking heads awarding the awards: you have past winners. People who’ve been up that mountain and know how hard it was to get there.

Whatever you do, don’t have an Emcee – especially not Ricky Gervais – there to distract from the one time that we pause from our usual activities and take a deep breath and say “!*$&!^!^!!!” as we watch the best of human athletes do what they do best.

Marcus, I agree. Especially regarding people who brag about how great we are, just because we’re a big place. It’s like map graphics that claim to be showing where some phenomenon is happening, but it always turns out to a first approximation to relate to total population, so the chart turns out to be the same as any chart of US population density. And neither the graphic artist nor the editor can figure out that they’ve seen it before, and that it adds nothing to the story. You’d think they could easily just code each state with a shade proportional to a value normalized by ratio to total population. Do they really not understand their own graphs? Or do they just avoid thinking about anything?

You missed a trick, Marcus – you forgot about the money. Not the IOC money, which is probably as bullying and exploitative as FIFA, but the money of the individual. Which nations have the money to put into government funded sports training institutions? The rich ones. People mock African nations for only really excelling at running events, but that’s one of the few sports that can be prepared for without training facilities; you won’t see them doing well at a swimming event if they have no aquatic center.

Which means medal tallies are really just a measure of national wealth, or at least, national willing-to-spend-big-on-athletes-for-reasons-of-nationalism.

I haven’t watched in 20+ years because I doubt that anyone is clean, or that the olympics have been drug-free since the 1950s. Victor Conte (who ran BALCO) said “60% of competitors used drugs in 2012”, but I think he was lowballing it. WADA and olympic drug testing are a fraud. It’s all for show, to give the pretense of wanting “clean events”. That was also shown in the Dubin Inquiry of 1990 where one witness claimed 80% of olympic track and field competitors were dirty.

The IOC wants drug use because TV networks, advertisers and viewers want to see olympic and world records. Records can’t be broken constantly without substances, whether equipment or drugs. Diet and training can only do so much. (See also: baseball’s farcical drug testing while the MLB sells the game with home runs and strikeouts.)

The solution to cheating is to criminalize it with real teeth. A first positive test means a lifetime ban, the country’s entire team (for that event) forfeits all medals and records from that games, and is barred from the next games. The cheat also forfeits financial gains plus interest (i.e. sponsorship money) and possibly gets jail or prison time. Let’s see anyone cheat with restrictions that severe.

Here’s my suggestions:

Make the olympics about the athletes and hold the events around the world, at the place(s) that make the most sense. Hold the skiing at the slope that makes the most sense, when it makes the most sense.

There are enough existing facilities that future games can be held on a rotational basis. Think back to the 1994 World Cup in the US, the first (and only) time a country didn’t need new stadiums to win the hosting bid. Use what already exists.

Summer: Spain, Australia, South Korea, etc.

Winter: France, Switzerland, Italy, Japan, Canada, etc.

Even sites that held the Commonwealth Games (average of 4,000+ competitors) wouldn’t require much of an upgrade to host a summer olympics. Or just scale back the summer games with fewer events. (Why is there equestrian, boat racing and shooting?) The only reason to demand new construction every time is bribery and kickbacks.

“Get the nationalism out of the sports, athletes should be referred to by name and not nation – this would do a lot to reduce the need nationalists feel to win at all costs, by cheating.”
But that would take all the fun out of the games! Sports is – and has been since ancient times – a proxy for war. There are no deaths on the arena these days, but the spectators still react as if there were.

Lassi Hippeläinen@#10:Sports is – and has been since ancient times – a proxy for war.

Perhaps in the minds of authoritarians and nationalists. I used to think that, too, but then I realized that it’s an obssession of the athletes – some of the athletes I know would do it whether there was any “side” behind them, or not. Larger team sports, especially when promoted by nationalists, yes – I agree.

Remember when there were people laughing at the Jamaican bobsled team? Uggggh. All I could think was how much I hate the idea that people belong to these “country” things because of the lines on the map where they are born.